First 96-Node Desktop Cluster Ships
Panaphonix writes "The Register reports that Orion Multisystems is shipping the first 96-node desktop cluster. 'With the new, larger system, customers get pretty much the most powerful computer around that can plug into a standard electrical socket.' According to the spec sheet, the DS-96 runs Fedora Core 2 and gets 110 GFlops sustained, 230 GFlops peak."
Nobody should need more than 640k of RAM anyways.
I FAIL IT!
but does it run freebsd?
I failed it to that guy from Montreal. I should kill myself.
Subject says it all.
Wait, one of the partners is The MathWorks? Creators of MATLAB?!! I'm in!
My uni recently got some a 12 system dell cluster that came loaded with redhat. mmm; paralizing is fun:)
96 Processors Under Your Desktop
Do you think it will go over well?
Like how many SETI units it can do in an hour, or like how fast it can spell check my Microsoft word document.
..........FULL STOP.
I am not familiar with the architecture of clusters, so I am a little surprised by the more than 100% difference between sustained and peak GFlops. I know what a GFlop is and all that, I just don't immediately see why there is such a huge difference.
Can someone summarize why there is such a huge difference?
bash: rtfm: command not found
Why not 3 it's much much better.
Utinam me logica falsa tuam philosophiam totam suffodiant.
Its not duped, this article has been clustered.
sheep.horse - does not contain information on sheep or horses.
At 150lbs or 68KG you need a Beowulf cluster of people to move it!
It's called a follow-up:
"In October, you'll be able to choose between"
"is shipping the first 96-node desktop cluster. '"
hahhahahha
I'd rather imagine the ultimate OS running on it.
Tuxracer on one of those !
This will be great for researchers with CPU-hungry simulations to run. A small box with a lot of grunt is exactly what you want when you're simulating the PHY layer for your 802.11n proposal.
With power requirements quintupling that of a standard desktop computer, I'd probably have to use it at my local coffee shop, or only turn it on briefly to scare away song birds.
Can it play tetris?
Will this make or break Transmeta? It uses their processors (Transmeta Tinside as the Register calls it). Slashdot already pronounced the death of Transmeta though (it has no more niches!), maybe this could revive interest?
Without a proper flamewar, Anonymous was undecided on what shell to run.
Let's just get them out of the way, shall we?
1) Imagine a beowulf cluster of... uh, hold on.
2) In Soviet Russia, the computer clusters YOU!
3) frist Psot!
4) DUPE!
5) Old people in Noth Korea...
6) How fast will the Linux Kernel compile on THAT baby?
7) Yeah, but what's the FPS in Quake III?
8)Some other comment regarding Microsoft, Sun, or SGI....
Also, if you browse at -1...
9) GNAA
10) goatse,
11) Cmdr Taco
There. Did I get them all? Let the REAL discussions begin!
I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
Isn't Cell supposed to hit a teraflop or something? And we should be using binary milestones like a 2^32-flop.
Transcend Humanity. Please.
...can it run Windows? (har har)
that's what appliance dollies are for and at 150lbs, it wouldn't be that difficult to move.
.. Computing?
I mean, does Blender run on it at least? Can I do anything interesting from an 'immediate-personal' perspective with 96 nodes, and I don't just mean run Quake, or fire up "make -j 96" and such things..
What sort of interesting modelling software is around? Could I use it to design stuff on a personal, non-hard-core science perspective? What are the practical uses for personal cluster computing?
; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
From TA "Sound power 55 bels"
:)
...and/or put the box in another room.
550 dBel noise? Perhaps the producers should look into Metal cooling ?
How many FPS can you get on Doom 3? I've got to plan my future purchasing decisions.
distcc, yeah. Parallel make, no.
Merrimac 2 terraflop workstation for $20,000
General CPU's just don't have the punch that special purpose or Fpga processors do.
picture here
I guess they haven't got one running their website...
It can if you set CC="distcc"
How long does it take to compile the linux kernel on that thing?
"I, for one, welcome our new insert comment here overloards"
I for one welcome our new orion mulisystems overlords
and how many Libraries of Congress ... ahh, I dunno.. What sort of LoC metric can we apply to this machine ?
I must have one right away to run my Seti at home screen saver! I really want a 100,000 work unit certificate.
hahahahhahaah
"What sort of interesting modelling software is around? Could I use it to design stuff on a personal, non-hard-core science perspective? What are the practical uses for personal cluster computing?"
POVRAY.
I wonder, with all that power, if it would play pong?
--- Sig
I can't hear you, the guy two cubicles over just fired up his new Opteron cluster. I'm just trying to hold on to my desk!
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Clearly 96 processors just isn't enough!
Not a very good product endorsement if you ask me.
zosxavius photography
I can benchpress that. It wouldn't be incredibly hard to move.
...what? A geek with STR > 10?
For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
How long does it take to perform OCR on every volume in the LoC?
Any other suggestions?
One of these at a LAN party.
I dream in binary.
Dup? http://linux.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=148296&c id=12429343
Forget Blender, How about Maya or Lightwave [screamernet] rendering?
Video Production Support
I wrote a simple program to work out the untimate answer and it keeps returning 42 and Inistists to understand it I need to upgrade to Earth 1.0! It's not worth the wait I'm telling you.
In the not too distant future, next Sunday A.D.
I mean, this thing is like the same size as an SGI octane, definitely smaller than an onyx.
96 processors?
less than 8 cubic feet?
now if only
a) it was quiter
b) I had $100000 (minor detail)
I could probably compile KDE in less than a day on this then - gentoo would be sweet!
I gotta say.. I'm a tad suspicious here.. there seems to be a lot of marketing flash (no pun intended) and scarce details.
What kind of CPUs are we talking about ? I'm assuming we're talking non-shared memory here, and therefore nodes that "retain" their own identies. But then isnt each cpu running it's own kernal ? That is.. This ISNT SMP , right ?
I think the details could be a lot clearer here. The lack of tech specs or simple explinations, and excessive use of buisness speak "Efficiency" "unprecendented power" etc. makes me a tad nervous.
call me when they make a laptop whith this specs..
General purpose processors have *WAY* more punch. Especially punch per dollar, as FPGAs are fairly expensive.
They're just general purpose, whether they be scalar (CPU) or vector (GPU), so an FPGA that is specifically optimized for a specific problem will kick the general purpose processor's butt - in that specific problem.
But try running Quake III on an FPGA - it will be killed by the CPU in processing and killed by the GPU in graphics. Assuming you can even cram everything you need to be a CPU or GPU into the limited real estate of the FPGA in the first place.
paintball
Perhaps one pair should be included for the $100000!
All the current Orion systems, including this one, use Transmeta Efficeon CPUs. Not surprising since Orion was founded by a Transmeta co-founder.
Actually, Efficeon performance is quite good on the type of repetitive loop-based code this system is intended for. It may not surpass an equivalent Athlon 64 or P4 based system, but in terms of bang per watt, it's not bad.
How fast can it organize the LoC, using bubble sort and the Dewey system?
Leave the OCR'ing for Google.
- Greg
Start a happiness pandemic
have a look here
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_Gene
Now I just need a desk big enough, and a power lead heavy enough to let me class this as a desktop machine.
#hostfile 0.0.0.0 primidi.com 0.0.0.0 www.primidi.com 0.0.0.0 radio.weblogs.com
Does it ship with ear defenders? - lets face it, a machine with 96 processors inside it requires a serious power supply and a lot of fans. I'm not sure I want a jet engine sitting on my desk. Maybe in the room down the corridor, but not on my desk.
An Itanium with one processor was bad enough...
I don't get it. This is 230 GFlops peak, for $100,000.
If I bought 7 XServe cluster nodes, that's a peak GFlops of around 7*35 = 245 (simply adding up the Flops, as the informative post said). At $3000 each, that's 7*3000 = $21,000.
Or if I had $100,000 to blow, spend it all on XServes (33 of them), in which case I'd have something like 33*35 = 1155 GFlops peak.
Plus they'd all be running Mac OS X Server and have Xgrid, so it'd be easier to use. (For some reason I doubt that their "easy-to-use Linux distribution" is as easy as a Mac.)
What exactly is the benefit of this over buying a stack of Macs?
From the spec sheet [i] Makes a standard Linux cluster into a standalone computer [/i] I wonder how it does that...
You can tell you're on /. when dividing 1e5 by 1e2 to get 1e3 gets modded up to +5 insightful. :-)
It looks pretty easy to walk out of the building with - although admittedly probably a limited resale audience. Supervillains spring to mind.
Strong, Light, Cheap - pick two.
How different is this from other solutions like this one from Apple?
t er/
http://www.apple.com/xserve/cluster/workgroupclus
You can build a 16node (with 32 CPUs and 128GB of RAM) for about 100K$ including software, powersupply and the works.
Is it because of the power consumption? There are add-on costs to the price quoted for Orion.
On account of processing speed having nothing to do with hard disk space...we can't apply Library of Congress conversion to it.
Doom3 Framerates already out...?
Good!
I'm not a troll, but I play one on Slashdot.
Ha.. What would the licencing be like to run windows on such a computer.. if you consider the 2 cpu limit of any normal copy of Windows XP!
Don't they know that busy execs, such as myself, only have time to read /. while we're waiting for the flat tire on our jet to be repaired or stuck in line because the darn executive jet fuel station is giving away Warren Buffet bobble head dolls....AGAIN!
...
/. and she spikes, sell her. No, not Ernies daughter dumbass, the stock. Yeh, let Ernie have the company and but make sure you bury the whozit order so it looks Ernie made it..."
After all that wait time, we're finally in the air and still no plain text info on that 96whatever it is that Bob says we need to impress the clients.
"Hey Bob, get on the horn and just order the damn thing. Hell, order 50 of 'em through that company that little weasel Ernie has been trying to buy from us. Oh yeh, and do the usual stock deal on the folks that make that 96whozit thing. Yep, buy a load and when news breaks on
turning
"Hey baby, who's your daddy? No No No, it's not a literal question. You're not supposed to say Ernie! Jesus save me! Go clean up"
Later
Damn Bob these donuts are good, but the crapper smells again and there's blue stuff on the bitches ass. Bob, if it weren't for the donuts and Ernies daughter, you'd be fired, no go clean her up.
But that's only the peak power. :-)
Although having 96 nodes in a single box makes it quite cute, from what I can interpret from the specs, you would get more bang for your $100K by getting what the beowulf crowd like to call MMCOTS (Mass-Market-Common-Off-The-Shelf, i.e. mass produced computers from Dell or the like), hooked toghether with a specialty high-bandwidth low-latency interconnect like Infiniband, Myrinet or SCI. Running a free beowulf cluster OS like for instance ROCKS would mean that a normal linux admin could maintain it quite effectively.
I expect this thing to be marketed towards scientists in small or medium businesses that aren't employing many/any IT staff, who use commercial computer models to do things like theoretical chemistry (Gaussian, ADF etc), bioinformatics (Phase, BLAS, Paralign etc), fluid dynamics, statistics, crypto, you name it. I don't expect to see any of these types of systems used in normal supercomputing sites, where people write their own (parallel) code and skilled staff maintain the cluster.
-- Buzh
It's up and running right now.
I am the Barber of Seville.
Not neccesarily at least. You could have a cluster of SMP machines thou ....
I am the Barber of Seville.
... is not something you carry under your arm like a desktop.
I am the Barber of Seville.
Apparently they can't be bothered to run their website on one of these babies... I guess the cobbler's children never get any shoes.
They say the mind is the first thing to
I've never seen that before.
So you cann't use it on a plane.
or does that seem a bit odd to bundle it on Fedora? I like Fedora as much as the next guy, but maybe such an expensive solution would be better suited for commercial distribution on a more predictable release schedule e.g. RHEL, Suse Enterprise etc?
Linux?
/.
darn. I failed too.
Finally, it meets the geek criteria for
What do you guys do with your computer? no seriously, I mean, Linux is desktop ready, my mom could use this, a desktop cluster running fedora core... You know all those reference to the desktop usability of this and that product. I mean this thing isn't a desktop cluster, it's just a cluster that some geek decided to use at home, that don't make it a desktop cluster. 110Gflops to browse the web with lynx? Write a document in Open Office? or edit a 72dpi resolution desktop wallpaper in the Gimp?
In my country (Quebec) we have this problem, people say "I have the right to..." and put a word beside it and that should give them the right to what the word says, in their mind just because they can align some word they think it gives them the right to do anything, even if the law says they can't do it. Same goes here at an other level, you guys think that slapping the word desktop to anything make it a desktop thing, but believe me there is more to a desktop than a product name or description, even if it runs a "desktop" OS like Fedora Core (here it goes again, Fedora Core is a desktop thing just because some guys said it not because it actually can be effectively used as such, except if you are beyond dedicated...).
No offense to Linux, the desktop cluster in itself or anything, just a little thought on the usage of the word desktop...
Who cares? Modern graphics cards are capable of (sorry it's a PDF, it was all I could find) 40 GFLOPS. That's not even in SLI mode, which actually does push you to about a 98% over a single card (in terms of raw processing power).
Why would you buy a 96-CPU setup when you could buy a 6-GPU setup and match the same theoretical performance? (All jokes aside about the costs being roughly equivalent, they're nowhere near the same.) 6 top of the line 6800s would run you about $3600. Even if you added top of the line parts for the rest of the system, you'd be looking at about $1600 per system. Add $0 for the linux distribution to drive the whole thing, and you're at a grand total of $10K.
I'm not impressed.
I currently have no clever signature witicism to add here.
Yea, I agree that Fedora was definitely an odd choice.. Well, I can trust that the kind of person whom can build a 96 node super computer, makes very educated decisions.. I'm glad to hear that company's are still involved in making these clusters. Its a great way to build something powerful for a cheap price, and not having to lean towards Crays etc.. I worked for a company called Patmos International for the longest time, and we never shipped a single cluster.. We had tons of investors that seemed interested of course, but after 2 years of contiuous development, and no sales, the investors simply stopped investing, therefore my job was done for.. We advertised the "$99,000" super computer that would supposedly be in "everyones" garage one day.. Of course that was just a saying because of how cheap we could offer a 32 node system with all of our custom applications and linux operating system. Pretty sweet setup.. it sucks to see the big guys go down sometimes.. to this day, it was the best job I've ever had.. You can still read about Patmos if you search for James Gatzka on google.. They tried their hardest to bring some damn technology and culture to the podunk town of the Eastern Shore of Maryland..
*plays the Apogee theme song music*
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mysql_pconnect() = bad!;
the only permanence in existence, is the impermanence of existence.
It's a "desktop cluster" because its compact. The word "desktop" is a good choice here, because what else would you call it and still be able to market it? "footprint of a desktop but too much power for mundane tasks" cluster? Don't take things so literally. At the end of the day, the people signing the purchase orders for these things are management, not low level IT staff, so you have to market accordingly. Also, Quebec isn't a country. It's a province in Canada. You may not like it, but that doesn't change the fact that it is, just like this product being a "desktop cluster"
technicaly speaking Tibet is not a country is a region of China, Taiwan isn't a country it's a region of China, and so on...
Quebec is a country, it's just not free yet...
What would be the target market for this kind of thing? Genomics and biochemistry? Engineering workstations for the department? Rendering? How about to run a company's desktops? Seems like it might be useful for CAVE-like environments and videoconferencing throughout a distributed office.. also maybe for a service provider offering virtual linux pcs?
We got one of the 12 node machines from Orion on loan for a couple weeks. I used it to do some radar cross section calculations. It uses these low power Transmeta processors, which put its 12 CPUs on par with our three-node dual Athlon cluster down the hall. I was not impressed by it speed-wise at all.
Packaging wise was pretty good, the nodes were all integrated in a single form-factor. It looks like it would be a great turn-key solution to a group doing cluster software development that can't deal with building their own cluster and then spend the time to maintain it. But for cluster-based computational speed there are better alternatives.
I beg to differ, but Taiwan IS a country.
How fast can it PageRank (or is that volume rank?) the LoC?
Last time I checked, your country was CANADA. You had your chance to get out of the union a few years ago and messed it up. No more whining!
No, the price for those headphones should be: priceless. Had you said that, you would probably already be modded +5 Funny.
eek
At linux.conf.au Anton Blanchard from IBM explained how they got a 128 way power pc under linux
One of my best friends just bought a tiny little house in downtown Toronto for $377,000. I left Toronto last November and moved to Santiago, Chile and live downtwon where my rent is $260/month, for quite a nice, though small place, in an excellent area.
So, if I spend $100K on the Orion DS-96, that leaves me more than enough for a 250 channel geodesic EEG system which would allow me to compute self-organizing maps of the human mind based on flashing the 1.6 million mindpixels I have collected over the past five years to various volunteers [english teachers], AND still have 56.73 years worth of rent left!
Too bad no bank will loan me $377,000 for a computer and an EEG system and the time to play with it...
It has almost as much compute power as my 3D graphics card!
With this maybe eclipse can keep up with my 2 finger typing.
150 pounds? That's not too bad, an IBM p575 128-way weighs about 3500 pounds for one frame... Now that's serious!
if this thing ran windows the cost would triple to over 300,000 if not more due to licensing costs
Your $100K cluster will require a $40K cooling unit and a $40K UPS on top of the power costs.
It's got a radeon 9000, same gpu as my laptop which I use for LANs, so if this thing will do 110GFlops and runs linux.. and you can run ut2k4 in linux... I'd be very curious. It's not too often that supercomputers have almost-sort-of-modern video chips. Then again, since its not multithreaded without support from the application of a cluster computing environment, it'd really only be running on 1 1.2ghz transmeta and that wouldnt be fun :(
Their 1350 Clusters all run Linux and use Infiniband, Myrinet, or GigE as the high speed interconnect and can bring you anywhere from 4 to 1024 nodes. You actually can order more than 1024 nodes, it's just not listed on the website. IBM 1350 recently built a cluster for a customer that was ~8000 nodes.
I was assuming it was built for actual cluster computing, not francy shmancy graphcs. It says it has MPI installed. If you want to edit the GIMP source code to do floodfill in parallel be my guest... :P
Seriously though at a previous internship many programs had a command line argument for how many processors to utilize. Of course the number of licenses used equalled the number of processors divided by 2, but it was still nice to have.
At $100,000 I wouldn't call this personal.
Quebec is not a country. I see that you are speaking english. Make up your mind. Sepratist or Not.
Taiwan is a country,...
It isn't a region of China just because China says it is, just like Quebec isn't a country just because you say it is.
This is just a gimmick to capitalize on the craze of HPC. People will sit back and watch to see how this "Cluster" performs. If multiple nodes at once fail you would have to shut the system down and crack the dumpster open. I call this system a very fast desktop not a cluster.
Ideal specs for Longhorn? maybe..
Now I have a desktop that's powerful enough to run EverQuest II!
if($post =~ /^(?:.+\s)?phat[\s\.,]/i){
lose_all_credibility($post);
}
hahah i haven't heard someone mention Blender in freakin years.. i wonder if anyone still uses moray or povray
*plays the Apogee theme song music*
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How blissfully ironic!
-3Suns
~~~~
The Revolution will be Slashdotted
For folks who often work with parallel systems (e.g., simulations, bioinformatics, soft computing researchers) this is a great thing. I can see a huge number of research projects including these machines in their grant proposals.
That is all.
"72 dpi resolution desktop wallpaper" is just wrong in so many ways.
.jpg or whatever is used as absolutely nothing more than a frame of reference for on screen rulers. When you save a 3000x2000 picture, you save a 3000x2000 picture. The DPI is irrelevant.
1: Computer monitors haven't been 72dpi in 20 years. Prove it to yourself. Gimp up a 72x72 pixel block on the screen and hold a physical (not on-screen) ruler up to your screen. Now gimp up something ~ 92 or 96 pixels on a side and hold up the physical ruler again. Which one's closer to an inch (note, the exact # of pixels needed depends on your choice of resolution and how you set your screen geometry).
2: "dpi" is a _printing_ term that is meaningless in the context of your monitor. Take your favorite "72dpi" photograph. Go into the settings that allow you to change dpi/resolution (I use PS, not gimp, so Id on't know where gimp has 'em). Change it to 1 dpi (making sure that any resizing is disabled) and save it. Now set it to 30,000 dpi and save it again. View 'em both in a picture viewer. Look different? I didn't think so. The "DPI" setting in a
The only time you should pay attention to DPI is if you are selling a photo and the purchaser is qualifying the photo by TWO of the following parameters: resolution, size (inches) and dpi. If they don't specify 2 of the above...the DPI doesn't matter.
You should be able to use make -j96 if you run
openmosix on it.
See here.
Although in theory modern GPUs can do arbitrary computations, that doesn't mean that you'd always benefit from doing the math there. However, for statistical computing, I'd think you could potentially see a large benefit.
Just to get this straight, you dislike it when people believe they have rights which they do not, but believing your province is a country is all well and good?
No wonder no one likes Quebec.
Don't use this one.
Off-topic:
If Taiwan is a region of China, then why are there two different passports? When one visit China from Taiwan, they need to bring their passport. Being in the U.S. I do not need to bring my passport in order to cross statelines. If that was the case, that would be insane.
China may think Taiwan is their region, but they sure don't act like it. And being born in Taiwan, I say Taiwan is a country. Though it would be good to have China and Taiwan reunited again.... though I don't know when and how that is going to happen.
Most people are not noting the primary reasons for the cost increase over building a cheap cluster. Their system can run off one power outlet. It is designed to pull a smaller amount of power than a typical cluster. Imagine the power bill from 96 350 watt power supplies. That's 33.6 kwh if my calculations are correct. They claim on the spec sheet a maximum consumption of 1.5 kwh total (1500 watt). That is considerably less in the grand scheme of things.
The other thing to consider is the cost of engineering in the nodes themselves.
root 10956 5164 0 Oct 22 - 0:23 sendmail: rejecting connections: load average: 70 (isn't sendmail just too kind)
Damn, if only I had some mod points with which I could raise this comment!
Last I heard, they claimed a solid 250 GFLOP rating from the 9 core cell processor. So, a Playstation 3 should be able to beat this. Or, if you want to pay some more, one of the IBM workstations equipped with Cells that the Playstation 3 software will be developed on.
Another processor that may help in the classes of problems that these things hit would be the PhysX chip from Aegia, due this Christmas. I'm currently working a project that hopes to eventually be looking toward either PhysX chips or Cells on multiple PCI or PCI-E cards hosted in quad dual-core Opteron chassis for accelerating a simulation farm. Either way, Cell or PhysX, I'd expect a factor of 10 cost reduction versus this beast for even better performance on highly parallel problems, though more general purpose problems would go to the cluster.
In my country (Quebec) we have this problem
Yeah, you do... and I think the problem is that you keep insisting Quebec is a separate country, and not a part of Canada!
I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
Or do you not know much about parallel computing?
They describe it here
They mention the version of message passing they use (message passing implies a distributed memory system). They mention what proc they are using. And nobody said this was SMP, they said it was a cluster (which as mentioned by another poster means that it isn't SMP).
"I'll have a Guinness, no wait, make that a Coors Light" -Grad student I work with, who shall remain anonymous...
I hope they have a big desk. If you search around their site, you can find some pictures that show the scale of the DS-96. It is about as big as a squat refridgerator. Not that I am complaining. Their processing power/area is WAY better than anything else out there, but it is definitely not a desktop system.
So if I went to an Indian college I would probably see these floortop clusters in the same places SGI Onyx's used to occupy in the 90's. It's the first time since 1995 you could actually see a quantum leap occuring in the same environment as standard PC's.
Since they don't name the CPU, it's probably a 32 bit Chinese x86 chip. Combined with the gigabit ethernet, it's hardly enthralling. If they upgraded it to 96 Opterons and 10 gigabit ethernet with an NVidia Quadro FX card, it would be something.
What's with the montreal thing? is there a joke here i'm not getting? please explain. thanks
Woo haw!! I am gonna get a last post mother f u c k e r!!!!!!
That a mini cluster is way easy to sneak out of the office... heck one janitor, one night, one car. and boom big fat take. makes laptops seem pretty smalltime.
I'm not paying $100K for a machine that delivers less than 50% efficiency on whatever benchmark they ran. That's not a flattering statistic. For $100K you might be better off building your own cluster, the only nice thing is Orion gives tech support (anybody know how much their support contracts are?)
As long as Maya runs on it, I will be happy. I will be able to gain some room back in my house, as it will replace several existing boxes with a single one, possessing far in excess of my existing total processing power. I don't care if I can get more power for the same money, if it means losing my living room. This box will give me room to put my treadmill back up so I can burn off the pot belly I have developed sitting at a desk 10-14h a day :)
...and besides, imagine the bragging rights from having 230teraflops peak under your desk...almost as good as one...nevermind ;p
At $100,000 I wouldn't call this personal.
..
If I could do something interesting with it, I would. Better than a car
; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
Is a computer that big and expensive a feasible alternative to a girlfriend? "I just like to rub up against it because it's warm". Don't short anything. Pun intended.
still takes a week to compile.
Science : Proprietary , Knowledge : Open Source
... and still frequent slashdot? I thought that brawn and brain was a sum of 1 proportioned by the amount of time frequenting slashdot ........
I am the Barber of Seville.
That a mini cluster is way easy to sneak out of the office... heck one janitor, one night, one car. and boom big fat take. makes laptops seem pretty smalltime.
I bet this thing phones home when it finds itself suddenly on the Internet or finds its IP address has changed, or anything. Heck, for the price it ought to have a GPS receiver and cellphone built-in that alerts authorities/owners/ClusterJack Central as soon as it detects itself going out the door.
Wasn't there a slashdot article on that sort of stuff (GPS/cellphone antitheft alert when an 'unauthorized location' is detected) being the next thing in laptops?
Tag lost or not installed.
Try telling that to Catherine the Great
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This is a _silly_ configuration error. Basically, apache is running with more processes than the mysql concurrent user limit. They probably upped the number of apache processes to handle the slashdotting, but didn't think about updating the mysql settings to match.
What's with the montreal thing? is there a joke here i'm not getting? please explain. thanks
For everyone posting this crap just for mod points
/home/www/php/functions/executequery.php on line 21
Warning: mysql_pconnect(): Too many connections in
Its not funny or interesting or informative. This has absolutely nothing to do with the machine but the mysql configuration. I suppose they should increase the number of allowed mysql connections just for the slashdotters. Please go to school because this is really making you all look extremely retarded.